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A 25-foot Native American Totem Pole Arrives in D.C.
by Dana Hedgpeth
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Many who touched the pole during its journey 'burst into tears because they could feel the energy'
Douglas James stood Thursday on the Mall in front of the 25-foot totem pole he and a team had spent three months hand-carving and painting from a 400-year-old red cedar tree.
James, a member of the Lummi Nation in Washington state, and a group of supporters and volunteers from his tribe hauled the pole on a flatbed truck more than 20,000 miles, including trips along the West Coast, a jaunt to Florida, then back to Washington state before heading across the Midwest and arriving in the other Washington, where the pole will stay as part of a campaign to protect sacred tribal lands.
"The pole speaks for itself," James said to the crowd. "It's been reaching out and touching many hearts."
The roughly 5,000-pound pole and its crew arrived a day earlier at the National Museum of the American Indian, where a small crowd welcomed the addition. It will stay outside the museum until Saturday, then be moved to Rawlins Park near 20th and E streets in Northwest, where it will stay for a month before a permanent home is found in the D.C. region, organizers said.
On Thursday, tribal leaders, the pole's carvers and Interior Secretary Deb Haaland -- the nation's first Native American Cabinet secretary -- blessed the pole at a ceremony on the Mall, saying many of the nation's policies originally were "intended to exclude" Native Americans.
"We're working hard to undo so many consequences of those actions," Haaland said, adding that the country is in a "new era" of "truth, healing and growth."
Lynda Terrill, of Arlington, stood in the crowd to see the pole after its long journey. A White retired English teacher, she said she wanted to support the Native American cause to save land sacred to them. Having worked more than five decades ago at a school in Page, Ariz., attended by Apaches and Navajos, Terrill said she had "seen how other people disrespected the Native peoples."
"I always remembered that and wanted to come do my part to honor and respect them," she said.
The totem pole's journey, which organizers dubbed the "Red Road to DC," was led by about a dozen people, many of whom are Native Americans and members of the Lummi Nation, a tribe of about 5,000 members west of Bellingham, Wash. They raised about $500,000 from dozens of nonprofits, sponsors and tribal groups for the cross-country trip.
The group said they met thousands of people along their journey -- many of whom became emotional as they touched the pole.
"They'd burst into tears because they could feel the energy," James said outside the museum just after the arrival of the pole, which was made from a tree that was cut, carved and painted with images of importance to Native Americans.
En route to D.C., the caravan stopped at several spots of importance to Native Americans including Chaco Canyon, a national park in New Mexico; the Standing Rock Indian Reservation in North Dakota; and Bears Ears National Monument in Utah. Each faces threats of development tied to natural resources or pipelines.
Phreddie Lane, a Lummi member who came up with the idea to bring the totem pole to D.C., said it was a "very historic moment" to bring it to the nation's capital. "And to have it sit among these sacred national monuments, representing Native American peoples, is special."
Organizers are working to find the pole a permanent home in or near the Washington area.
But finding a spot for the enormous totem pole in a city filled with red tape has been tough. It wouldn't fit inside the National Museum of the American Indian because engineers there said it was too big and too heavy for its floors. Its arrival coincides with an exhibit at the museum that will showcase the Lummi Nation's history of pole carving.
Another 13-foot totem pole made by the same group -- the House of Tears Carvers -- was placed at Congressional Cemetery in D.C. to honor victims who were at the Pentagon during the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. The group has carved and painted more than 110 totem poles in the past three decades for homes for veterans, schools and other groups.
James said they wanted to give the totem pole to the Biden administration and send a message to Washington about the sacred tribal lands: "We want to come together with one heart and one mind to save these sites."
For many of those on the caravan, presenting the pole in D.C. to Haaland, who is a member of the Pueblo of Laguna, is a meaningful part of the journey.
Crystal Echo Hawk, who is Pawnee and executive director of the nonprofit IllumiNative advocacy group, said showcasing the totem pole in D.C. is meant for "Americans to see that Native peoples are leading the way around issues of protecting lands, waters."
Too often, she said, Native Americans haven't been fully included in major decisions on development in and around their sacred lands.
"Native peoples need to be consulted," Echo Hawk said. "No one wants a corporation or government to come into your neighborhood and develop something that jeopardizes your drinking water or bulldozes your church. But that's what essentially happens to Native Americans and our sacred sites."
Totem pole carving is a tradition for some tribes, mainly in British Columbia and the U.S. Pacific Northwest. The totem poles often are said to be a "spiritual being" and are considered sacred symbols of a tribe, clan or a family tradition.
For the Lummi Nation, totem poles historically are carved with symbols that represent a certain clan of a tribe or show a family or tribe's lineage. They can have scenes that depict an important tribal leader or might have a panel that shows a tribal battle.
"They represent visions, dreams and stories that are handed down and shaped through each generation," said James's brother -- Jewell "Praying Wolf" James, who is the master carver of the pole brought to D.C.
Measuring about 43 inches wide, the totem pole was made in roughly three months. The tree was cut, carved and painted with images and symbols that include an eagle, moon, salmon and a man praying.
It contains an image of a woman with a girl kneeling near her, a scene meant to depict grandmothers across the country who are raising and teaching their granddaughters traditional Native American ways, according to Jewell James.
He said seven tears near the image represent seven generations of Native people throughout the world who have been "traumatized by the treatment they received from non-Indians."
A red hand on the pole represents the hundreds of Indigenous women who are murdered or go missing each year.
The project marks the first time House of Tears Carvers has made and moved such a large totem pole.
Stops on its trip from the West have drawn thousands of Native Americans and non-Natives, organizers said, who came to offer support and prayers and lay their hands on the pole.
At Snake River -- a tributary of the Columbia River that runs through part of Idaho and other states where Native American tribes are worried about the declining population of spawning salmon because of dams -- many who came said they felt special to see the pole.
"Carrying a totem pole from Indian Country with a message is an ancient practice and considered a way to raise awareness of what's important to us," said Shannon Wheeler, vice chairman of the Nez Percé tribe in Idaho. He said he hopes the message the pole brings to Washington is that Native Americans are "not history."
"We're not pre-1900s and we're not just old black-and-white photos you find on the Internet," Wheeler said. "We're still living, breathing and exercising our way of life that we've practiced for hundreds of years … We're still here, and we don't intend to go anywhere."
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